Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Vienna is the gate to Eastern Europe.
Vienna is a city where they love sports.
If you set out to take Vienna, take Vienna.
When you set out to take Vienna, take Vienna.
He's going to audition for the Vienna Boys' Choir!
The Congress of Vienna does not walk, but it dances.
Vienna is a handsome, lively city, and pleases me exceedingly.
I received my doctorate from the University of Vienna in 1910.
I have the feeling that I was born in Vienna in order to live in Paris.
And I'll bury my soul in a scrapbook, with the photographs there and the moths.
You might be a redneck if your wife keeps a can of Vienna sausage in her purse.
The streets of Vienna are paved with culture, the streets of other cities with asphalt.
I actually speak fluent German. And I live in Vienna, and I'm married to a Viennese woman.
I'm an immigrant - I've got to be in the city: London, Vienna, or Rome, but always a city.
The Vienna Franks are a good example of urban white acid folk revivalism crossed with ska.
The Potemkin city of which I wish to speak here is none other than our dear Vienna herself.
In Berlin, things are serious but not hopeless. In Vienna, they are hopeless but not serious.
I studied at a grammar school and later at the University of Vienna in the Faculty of Medicine.
Friends from Vienna visit me a lot, and when the weather's bad we usually end up playing 'FIFA.'
But yes, I really feel great in Austria, I love my home and Vienna is just the best place to be.
Dream on, but don't imagine they'll all come true. When will you realize... Vienna waits for you.
From time to time, the Vienna Philharmonic could play without a conductor because they are so good.
For my Vienna is as different from what they call Vienna now as the quick is different from the dead.
After the first exams, I switched to the Faculty of Philosophy and studied Zoology in Munich and Vienna.
If I speak of Vienna it must be in the past tense, as a man speaks of a woman he has loved and who is dead.
Well I live in Vienna with my wife and son, and I teach in Hamburg, there will be no changes in that respect.
My family had to live in Vienna for three months, then in Italy for another nine, while we waited for refugee status.
I'm sure that being an applicant from the American School in Vienna helped get me into all seven colleges I applied to.
I do have an honorary professorship in Poetics from the Vienna Academy of Arts. So I have not gone completely unnoticed
[During fee negotiations for singing in Vienna:] I'm not interested in money, but it must be more than anyone else gets.
You don't need to go to Rome, Prague or Vienna to find wonderful architecture, amazing stories and suprising, hidden gems.
I was born an only child in Vienna, Austria. My father found hours to sit by me by the library fire and tell fairy stories.
In December of 1952, my first wife, Kirby, and I left Vienna to drive through the Russian sector of Austria into Yugoslavia.
The Grammy snuck up on me. I was on tour. It just hit me. I skipped down the street in Vienna. I kept saying, 'I won. I won.'
I now have plans to create a school for singers in Vienna, and I would love to found one in the Middle East, too, if possible.
I was born in Romania and later lived in Vienna, Austria, for a few years, and I eventually made my way over to New York in '95.
There were 117 psychoanalysts on the Pan Am flight to Vienna and I'd been treated by at least six of them. And married a seventh.
I've been to Bali twice and Marrakech twice. I thought Vienna was great. I will take girlfriends to places they've never been before.
Everywhere I went, Rapid Vienna or Austria Vienna, there was always a problem. I just wanted a coach who said: 'Just go out and win us the game.'
In my life, my parents wanted me to be a musician, I was supposed to go to Vienna to study piano. But this train wanted to go in another direction.
I was born in Vienna on November 7, 1929, eleven years after the multiethnic Austro-Hungarian Empire fell apart following its defeat in World War I.
My parents came a long time ago to Vienna, met in Vienna. Of course they had to go through a lot also, but we're very happy to have our home in Vienna.
I was born in 1923 into a middle class Jewish family in Vienna, a few years after the end of World War I, which was disastrous from the Austrian point of view.
My small experience on 'Dancing with the Stars' allowed me to slowly appreciate the Waltz and Viennese Waltz, but to see it in Vienna is something much different.
I employ 20 people in Vienna. The other 130 coworkers are pilots and flight companions. The Overhead is limited with me. Reduces naturally the costs of my fliers.
My idea was to go to Vienna to study conducting and perhaps play in an orchestra first, so I thought before I got to Vienna I could do with a little training in Paris.
When you think of the Cold War, there are various places where you imagine espionage. Espionage crossroads of the Cold War bring you to the backstreets of Berlin, or Vienna.
For almost thirty years I repeatedly saw one and the same dream: I would arrive in Vienna at long last. I would feel really happy, for I was returning to my serene childhood.
Gold is a great thing to sew into your garments if you're a Jewish family in Vienna in 1939, but I think civilized people don't buy gold, they invest in productive businesses.
My parents were not born in Vienna, but they had spent much of their lives there, having each come to the city at the beginning of World War I when they were still very young.